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IPv6 Transition: Let’s make it happen!

IPv6 Transition: Let’s make it happen!. 16 th June, 2011 AP Regional IGF, Singapore Miwa Fujii Senior IPv6 Program Specialist APNIC ( www.apnic.net ). Overview. About Internet and APNIC About Internet Protocol: IPv4 and IPv6 IPv4 addresses exhaustion and need to adopt IPv6

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IPv6 Transition: Let’s make it happen!

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  1. IPv6 Transition: Let’s make it happen! 16th June, 2011 AP Regional IGF, Singapore Miwa Fujii Senior IPv6 Program Specialist APNIC (www.apnic.net)

  2. Overview • About Internet and APNIC • About Internet Protocol: IPv4 and IPv6 • IPv4 addresses exhaustion and need to adopt IPv6 • What does this mean to all of us? • Where are we now? • Internet stakeholders and IPv6 transition

  3. About Internet and APNIC • The Internet: a global system of interconnected computer networks • Internet Protocol (IP) provide connectivity • IPv4 and IPv6 = Internet resources • Regional Internet Registries (RIR) • Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC) • Open membership-based industry bodies • Non-profit, neutral, and independent • Internet resource allocation, registration and other services such as training, supporting infrastructure, community cooperation

  4. Policy Development Process Need OPEN Anyone can participate Evaluate Discuss ‘BOTTOM UP’ TRANSPARENT Implement Consensus Internet community proposes and approves policy All decisions & policies are documented & available

  5. About Internet Protocol (IP) • On the Internet you are nothing but IP addresses • Not same as a domain name • Packets, addressing and routing • Two types: IPv4 and IPv6 • Every device directly connected to the Internet needs a unique IP address • IP address space is finite

  6. Recap • Size of IPv4 addresses • 32-bit address • Unit to describe a size of IP address space • / = slash notation • /8 = 224 = about 16.5 million IPv4 addresses • /16 = 216 = about 65,000 IPv4 addresses • /24 = 28 = 256 IPv4 addresses • 232 = about 4.2 billion IP addresses • 232 = 256 x /8 IPv4 address space

  7. IP Addresses: IPv4 vs. IPv6

  8. IPv4 addresses exhaustion and need to adopt IPv6 • 3 Feb 2011 • Number Resource Organization (NRO) announced the free pool of available IPv4 addresses is now fully depleted • The free pool of available IPv4 addresses at APNIC reached the final /8 • Need to deploy IPv6 IANA AfriNIC ARIN LACNIC RIPE APNIC

  9. Impact of IPv4 address exhaustions • Immediate impact • ISPs will no longer be able to obtain IPv4 addresses from APNIC • Survive for a short time of period with their own pool • Business continuity of ISPs and other Internet multi-stakeholders in question • Need to find alternative source for IPv4 addresses • No sustainable alternative options • Prolonged impact • Difficulties to maintain sustainable Internet growth • No more new entries to the Internet market place • Impediment of further technological development

  10. Why do we need IPv6 • IPv6 is the only viable option we have now • Much larger address space than IPv4 • Enable sustainable growth of the Internet • Possibilities of emergence of new technologies • More non-computing devices, and mobile devices connecting to the Internet • Ever increasing always on end users using global IP addresses

  11. What does this mean to all of us? • Internet industry is facing a biggest challenge; the biggest since inception of the Internet • Internet multi-stakeholders need to transit to IPv6 • To maintain global competitiveness, governments should support industry to deploy IPv6

  12. IPv6 transition technologies • Various IPv6 transition technologies are available • Deciding to “support” IPv6 in a network and completing implementation of specific technologies are two different things • Developing a specific plan, timelines and costs • Assessing the incremental risks and opportunities • One size does not fit all • All Internet multi-stakeholder need to act now • ISPs need to: • Introduce IPv6 into their service portfolio • Introduce additional measures allowing them more efficient use of IPv4 addresses http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2011-02/transtools-part1.pdf http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2011-03/transtools-part2.pdf

  13. IPv6 transition technologies • Complexity generated in the existing IPv4 networks by Network Address Translator (NAT) • Generally pass only TCP and UDP transport protocols • IPv6-in-IPv4 protocol may not pass NATs • How to offer IPv6 connectivity to end hosts in IPv4 NATed network? • Maintaining the same level of robustness and performance as compared to IPv4 services • IPv6 business plan needs to be considered simultaneously while choosing IPv6 transition technologies http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2008-02/tui.pdf http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2011-02/transtools-part1.pdf http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2011-03/transtools-part2.pdf

  14. Where are we now? IPv6 enabled networks IPv6 / IPv4 AS Count Ratio http://bgp.potaroo.net/stats/nro/v6/ as of 07/06/2011

  15. Where are we now? http://www.apnic.net/publications/research-and-insights/stats/ipv6-distribution as of June 2011

  16. Where are we now? • IPv6 Forum: List of IPv6 enabled ISPs • http://www.ipv6forum.com/ipv6_enabled/isp/approval_list.php • So far 98 are listed, e.g. in the AP region, • Australia: PPS Internet • China: China Telecom, China Unicom • Chinese Taipei: Chunghwa Telecom HiNet • Indonesia: D-NET, DTPNet • Japan: Avis, NTT, IIJ, FreeBit, Dream Train • Thailand: ThaiSam • Malaysia: Jaring Communications • More ISPs with IPv6 though not listed in the IPv6 Forum site

  17. Where are we now? • CDN and Content providers • CDN: Akamai • Finally CDNs are getting ready with IPv6 • Q1 2011: IPv6 service for selected customers • 2H 2011: Beta services for IPv6 end users • 1H 2012: With limited availability • Avoid Carrier Grade Nat (CGN), tunnels, indirect routes, and other performance reliability bottlenecks • Content providers • Google: Most Google services are IPv6 enabled • Facebook: Experimenting IPv6 (non-production yet) (www.v6.facebook.com, etc.) • Etc. http://www.apricot-apan.asia/program/ipv6-trans-conf

  18. Internet stakeholders • Governments • Promote public and private sectors cooperation • Define IPv6 mandatory standard for government procurements • Deploy IPv6 government infrastructure • ISPs • Deploy IPv6 in their production networks and provide IPv6 connectivity services to their customers • Equipment vendors • Introduce IPv6 support into your product cycle, listen to your customers’ request to improve IPv6 functionalities of your equipment • Application developers • Confirm existing applications’ coding can handle IPv6 data and develop new applications with IPv6 capability • Content providers and CDN • Enable IPv6 reachability for your content • CDN to provide IPv6 enable content distribution services

  19. Preparing for IPv6 Transition Overall planning • Review the impact of IPv4 address exhaustion • Inventory of your IT assets • Develop an IPv6 deployment plan • Strategy, scope of the deployment, schedule, auditing of execution of the plan • How to manage coexistence of IPv4 and IPv6 • Where to start to deploying IPv6? • What transition techniques to be employed? • Staff training • Budget readiness

  20. Preparing for IPv6 Transition • Technical management • Assess the possibility of IPv4 and IPv6 co-existence with desired technology • There are quite a few transition technologies are available • Assess security implication of IPv6 • Any new technology comes with new security threats and vulnerabilities • Human capacity development • Develop a plan to acquire skills to implement IPv6 • Implement a test networks with IPv6

  21. How APNIC can Contribute • Provide “IPv6 Workshops” in collaboration with regional organizations • Provide information to policy makers, regulators and CIOs in your economy • Round table discussions • APNIC eLearning IPv6 modules are open to anyone • Contribute to your multi-stakeholder outreach efforts • Regional conferences

  22. Next APNIC MeetingAPNIC 32 Participation is open to anyone in the Internet community. Join us!

  23. IPv6 Transition Plenary 30th Aug 2011

  24. IPv6:A prerequisite to the sustainable long-term development of a ubiquitousand open InternetThank you!<miwa@apnic.net>

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